The marriage of Monalisa and Farmaan has sparked...
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- 2 hours ago
- 3 min read
🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
The marriage of Monalisa and Farmaan has sparked serious questions. Director Sanoj Mishra alleges that Farmaan has no film background and comes from a modest family, his father running a puncture repair shop. Yet, their wedding in Kerala saw the presence of prominent ministers, raising suspicions about the scale of the event. Mishra suggests that such grandeur could not have been possible without external sponsorship, hinting at banned organizations like PFI. He demands a thorough investigation into whether extremist groups funded or orchestrated the ceremony. The issue is not merely about a personal relationship but about potential political and ideological manipulation. If true, it reflects a dangerous trend of exploiting vulnerable individuals for propaganda. The government must act decisively to uncover the truth and protect social harmony.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Across Maharashtra, social media is flooded with ads promising “plots for ₹15 lakh,” “no need to be a farmer,” and “cash payments.” Yet laws clearly define who can buy agricultural land, when land becomes non-agricultural, and what permissions are required for plotting. Despite this, villages witness rampant illegal land cutting, with small plots sold to unsuspecting buyers. Later, they discover no roads, water, electricity, or legal validity. This exposes a glaring failure of enforcement. If laws exist, why are revenue officials, district collectors, tehsildars, and police silent? The government must act firmly. District-level task forces should investigate every project, file criminal cases against violators, and set up complaint boxes in all offices for citizens to report illegal deals. People don’t want cheap plots—they want legal land and secure futures.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
West Bengal’s election has been announced, and the atmosphere is charged with tension. Over recent months, legal battles consumed Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s focus, leaving her estranged from media allies and weakening her political ground. The Supreme Court upheld the SIR process, confirming large voter exclusions, while ED raids added further complications.The Election Commission has taken unprecedented steps—deploying thousands of CRPF companies, transferring top officials, and tightening oversight to ensure free and fair polls. These measures strip away the state machinery that once bolstered TMC dominance. With voting scheduled in just two phases on April 23 and 29, and counting on May 4, the stage is set for a decisive contest. The coming weeks will reveal whether Bengal witnesses the end of Mamata’s political supremacy.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Since 2014, a clear pattern has emerged in BJP’s governance—Chief Ministers are replaced and often brought to Delhi for national roles. Sarbananda Sonowal, Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Manohar Lal Khattar, and others were moved from their states into ministerial or organizational positions. Anandiben Patel became Governor, Vijay Rupani was made Punjab in-charge, while leaders like Yediyurappa and Bommai now serve in Delhi. This reshuffling strengthens central control while refreshing state leadership. Even Nitish Kumar, once Bihar’s CM, has now been brought to Delhi as a Rajya Sabha MP, marking the first such move in Modi’s third term. Reports suggest two more BJP Chief Ministers may soon follow, with one name expected to surprise many. The strategy is clear: consolidate power nationally while recalibrating states ahead of 2029.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
As elections in five states are announced, mainstream anchors rush to frame narratives. Yet the public remembers past episodes—like March 2014, when the government transferred 123 properties to the Waqf Board in the morning and the Election Commission declared polls by afternoon. Such timing raised eyebrows then, and similar suspicions arise now. The real shift, however, is in media credibility. Traditional channels may attempt partisan spins, but social media has become the true mainstream. Every claim is instantly scrutinized, every contradiction exposed. Viewers no longer depend on television studios; they fact-check in real time. Legacy media must recognize its diminished authority. In the age of digital transparency, biased narratives collapse quickly. The message is clear: stop the duplicity, because the people are watching.
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#AbhijeetRane #MamataBanerjee #NarendraModi #NitishKumar #ShivrajSinghChouhan #ManoharLalKhattar #SarbanandaSonowal #BSYediyurappa #BasavarajBommai #AnandibenPatel #VijayRupani #DevendraFadnavis








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